Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know what percentage of teaching colleges/education schools and school districts embraced the Lucy Calkins balanced literacy curriculum, but I believe the curriculum dominated the market and was used in many states and public school districts. It is hard to blame school districts and public officials for initially adopting it. It was well marketed and was a strong fad that really caught on. Some districts were required by state legislatures to use the curriculum.
I do blame researchers, public officials, and school districts for taking decades before they understood the effects of the curriculum and came to the realization that it was not effective whatsoever. I don't blame teachers. They are not scientists and researchers. They did not understand how to teach someone to read. They used the methodology they learned in college and from the professional training they received. If you read the testimony of teachers who taught the curriculum and realized later how terrible it was, they were sick to their stomachs about all the children who suffered and did not learn to read well because of the curriculum.
I only blame teachers and schools that are still clinging to it. We all know better. A teacher who is still using LC is negligent and should be fired. (And yes, I've met some, including in APS. Last year at BTS night the APS teachers explained that they were not introducing Core Knowledge LA but had decided to do another year of LC in 1st grade. They later backtracked a bit and said they'd also use 95Phonics with LC, but still weren't going to do Core Knowledge LA.)
Anonymous wrote:I don't know what percentage of teaching colleges/education schools and school districts embraced the Lucy Calkins balanced literacy curriculum, but I believe the curriculum dominated the market and was used in many states and public school districts. It is hard to blame school districts and public officials for initially adopting it. It was well marketed and was a strong fad that really caught on. Some districts were required by state legislatures to use the curriculum.
I do blame researchers, public officials, and school districts for taking decades before they understood the effects of the curriculum and came to the realization that it was not effective whatsoever. I don't blame teachers. They are not scientists and researchers. They did not understand how to teach someone to read. They used the methodology they learned in college and from the professional training they received. If you read the testimony of teachers who taught the curriculum and realized later how terrible it was, they were sick to their stomachs about all the children who suffered and did not learn to read well because of the curriculum.
Anonymous wrote:I’m not sure if this should be here or general education but how does a large school district adopt a standard of learning that is not evidence based? Now you have years of kids that haven’t really learned to read or spell. I thought teachers had autonomy but it sounds like the method of instruction and curriculum is decided by the administrators/ county.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know what percentage of teaching colleges/education schools and school districts embraced the Lucy Calkins balanced literacy curriculum, but I believe the curriculum dominated the market and was used in many states and public school districts. It is hard to blame school districts and public officials for initially adopting it. It was well marketed and was a strong fad that really caught on. Some districts were required by state legislatures to use the curriculum.
I do blame researchers, public officials, and school districts for taking decades before they understood the effects of the curriculum and came to the realization that it was not effective whatsoever. I don't blame teachers. They are not scientists and researchers. They did not understand how to teach someone to read. They used the methodology they learned in college and from the professional training they received. If you read the testimony of teachers who taught the curriculum and realized later how terrible it was, they were sick to their stomachs about all the children who suffered and did not learn to read well because of the curriculum.
Anonymous wrote:It is so typical of the dysfunctional FCPS system to fall for the latest scam / fad in education, which is eventually exposed as harmful to children .
Anonymous wrote:But she didn't say that they didn't learn to read at the same time, just that one learned to read in a slightly different way.
On what basis can you say that reading early isn't as important as having a rich vocab? Reading opens a whole new world, and fosters vocab development, as well as knowledge acquisition that then enhances reading skills. I wish more children were afforded the opportunity to learn to read early rather than being denied it based on ideas about them not being mature enough, etc. The brain is ready for reading early on.
I know there's a contingent who thinks kids should play and learn later, and the focus on academics in FCPS is too much. I get it, but people need to realize that many kids aren't privileged to have parents at home to support them when they finally do get around to learning. Schools should be much more focused on teaching core academic skills than they are, imho.
Years of teaching first grade and observing students.
Language comes first. Then, reading. Sure, you develop vocabulary by reading--but spoken language comes first. If children do not know what an elephant is, they are not going to "get" it from reading a book.
I also taught children who had been "trained" to read early who could not answer simple comprehension questions, but coudl "call" words. I'd rather have a student who can think that one who can memorize.
But she didn't say that they didn't learn to read at the same time, just that one learned to read in a slightly different way.
On what basis can you say that reading early isn't as important as having a rich vocab? Reading opens a whole new world, and fosters vocab development, as well as knowledge acquisition that then enhances reading skills. I wish more children were afforded the opportunity to learn to read early rather than being denied it based on ideas about them not being mature enough, etc. The brain is ready for reading early on.
I know there's a contingent who thinks kids should play and learn later, and the focus on academics in FCPS is too much. I get it, but people need to realize that many kids aren't privileged to have parents at home to support them when they finally do get around to learning. Schools should be much more focused on teaching core academic skills than they are, imho.
Anonymous wrote:DP. I posted up thread about my anecdotal experience. I taught both of my kids to read at 4-4.5 before kindergarten. They both already knew their letters, sounds and names. They both could already rhyme and clap syllables. I bought some highly regarded phonics readers (MCP, excellent books) and my first read through them and then was a fluent reader entering kindergarten. My second couldn't make heads or tales of CVC. Just didn't even know where to start, he didn't get it. So I bought some newer readers that used the "Look at the _____ snake, truck, caterpillar" with pictures and he got the idea. Then we went back to the phonics readers and then he had the idea and read through them and was a fluent reader.
No issues with dyslexia or visual processing or a vocabulary poor environment. Just a different sort of brain than his brother. He needed phonics and something else, too.
Former first grade teacher--back when kids learned to read in first grade:
PP, it also may be that child #2 just wasn't quite mature enough to read earlier. Sometimes, the light just clicks on. I taught a number of kids who could not read at all at the beginning of the school year--but come January, the light clicked on and they ended up at the top of the class. Not every child did this, but some. It happens,
Reading early is not as important as having rich vocabulary and understanding.
DP. I posted up thread about my anecdotal experience. I taught both of my kids to read at 4-4.5 before kindergarten. They both already knew their letters, sounds and names. They both could already rhyme and clap syllables. I bought some highly regarded phonics readers (MCP, excellent books) and my first read through them and then was a fluent reader entering kindergarten. My second couldn't make heads or tales of CVC. Just didn't even know where to start, he didn't get it. So I bought some newer readers that used the "Look at the _____ snake, truck, caterpillar" with pictures and he got the idea. Then we went back to the phonics readers and then he had the idea and read through them and was a fluent reader.
No issues with dyslexia or visual processing or a vocabulary poor environment. Just a different sort of brain than his brother. He needed phonics and something else, too.